Adicionar um enredo no seu idiomaSusan and Paul are working late on the thirty-seventh floor of a Los Angeles skyscraper. Also in the building are the cleaning staff, security, and some engineers installing sprinklers. As t... Ler tudoSusan and Paul are working late on the thirty-seventh floor of a Los Angeles skyscraper. Also in the building are the cleaning staff, security, and some engineers installing sprinklers. As the water pumps are switched off so that work on the sprinklers can continue, a fire starts... Ler tudoSusan and Paul are working late on the thirty-seventh floor of a Los Angeles skyscraper. Also in the building are the cleaning staff, security, and some engineers installing sprinklers. As the water pumps are switched off so that work on the sprinklers can continue, a fire starts on the twelfth floor.
- Direção
- Roteirista
- Artistas
- Battalion Chief Rinosso
- (as Ismael Carlo)
Enredo
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- CuriosidadesBased on the real-life 1988 fire at the First Interstate Bank Tower in downtown Los Angeles, California, the lobby scenes for this movie were shot at the neighboring Wells Fargo Bank building. Years later, Wells Fargo acquired First Interstate Bank and its various banking subsidiaries.
- Erros de gravaçãoWhen the fire fighters are on the 10th floor fighting the fire. You can see the brush strokes on the wall where the fire gel was applied.
Lisa Hartman and Peter Scolari portray two of the survivors of the First Interstate fire who, on that evening, found themselves cut off from help on the 37th floor of the 62-story building when the fire broke out. During a test of the sprinkler system, which is only 90% finished, the water is shut off; and on the 12th floor of the building, the fire erupts. But because it is not only the sprinkler system that isn't functioning but also the smoke alarms, the building's security staff is unable to pinpoint the exact location of the fire until it has already spread beyond their control and tragically killed one of the maintenance workers. By the time the Los Angeles Fire Department, under the command of deputy chief Donald Sterling (Lee Majors) arrives, everyone is out of the building except for Hartman and Scolari, who cannot go down any of the stairwells to safety because of the smoke and the threat that the fire may reach their floor before the fire department can get a handle on it.
Like a great many disaster films based on real-life incidents, FIRE: TRAPPED ON THE 37TH FLOOR does tend to emphasize certain aspects of the story for dramatic license, though not for sensationalistic scenes of death by fire. In a precursor to what happened with New York City and Port Authority fire departments on 9/11, but with only one death attributable to it, communications problems, combined with the perceived false alarms of the smoke detectors and the uninstalled sprinklers, kept the fire burning for far longer than it should have; and many fire personnel who had to fight the fire inside the five floors were hindered in their communications on the ground by the noise and the turbulence generated by the rotor wash of the helicopters doing surveillance of the building. In general, however, given that this was the worst high-rise fire in the city's history, the professionalism of the L.A. Fire Department kept it from being a holocaust, a fact that is acknowledged by this film, as THE TOWERING INFERNO had emphasized in its fictional version of the ultimate high-rise horror story.
Even though Jeffrey Bloom's screenplay and Robert Day's direction occasionally tend to veer in the somewhat melodramatic direction of so many disaster movies, both big screen and small screen alike, FIRE: TRAPPED ON THE 37TH FLOOR still manages to boast good performances from TV veterans Scolari, Hartman, and Majors; and the special effects work of Josh Haikan, and the score by Gil Melle (who had worked on director Robert Wise's 1971 sci-fi classic THE ANDROMEDA STRAIN) enhance the mood of the film even more. Like the much more elaborate TV disaster film THE BIG ONE: THE GREAT LOS ANGELES EARTHQUAKE, which aired on NBC only three and a half months before, FIRE: TRAPPED ON THE 37TH FLOOR may not be a masterpiece of either the TV film arena or the disaster film genre, but it is effective enough, especially as it provides a real-enough re-creation of a nightmarish event in L.A. history, one many fear will, even with stricter fire codes, be replicated with far more calamitous results in the future.
- virek213
- 18 de jan. de 2012
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- Atrapados en el piso 37
- Locações de filme
- Los Angeles City Fire Station 47 - 4575 Huntington Drive North, Los Angeles, Califórnia, EUA(Fire Station Task Force 3)
- Empresas de produção
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